FIFA has fired Jerome
Valcke for the second time, cutting ties with the secretary general four months
after he was suspended while under investigation for wrongdoing at the
scandal-scarred governing body.
FIFA
announced Wednesday that its emergency committee, consisting of the heads of
the regional confederations, decided to dismiss Sepp Blatter's top aide over
the weekend.
Valcke,
whose main duty at FIFA was overseeing organization of the World Cup, rose to
the top administrative job in 2007 after being re-hired despite being fired the
previous year over his role in a sponsorship controversy.
Coming
less than a month after Blatter was banned for eight years by FIFA, Valcke's
second dismissal completes the downfall of the two men who had traveled the
globe on private jets and were entertained by national leaders as they ran
international soccer.
The
Frenchman was banished from FIFA in September when he was put on leave within
hours of a FIFA ticketing partner alleging that the former television presenter
and marketing executive sought to profit from a 2014 World Cup black market
ticket deal that later fell through.
Since
then, the FIFA ethics case into Valcke has hardened. FIFA prosecutors last week
recommended a nine-year ban after charging him with accepting gifts, conflicts
of interest, breaches of confidentiality and loyalty, and failing to cooperate
with investigators.
FIFA
ethics judges are expected to hear the case within weeks but Valcke will not be
returning to the governing body he ran on a day-to-day basis.
"The
employment relationship between FIFA and Jerome Valcke has ... been
terminated," FIFA said in Wednesday's statement.
Markus
Kattner will continue to serve as acting secretary general, while refusing to
publicly discuss his role of finance director and why FIFA authorized a 2
million Swiss franc (US$2 million) payment to Michel Platini, which led to the
UEFA president being banned from soccer for eight years along with Blatter.
As
marketing director at the start of the last decade, Valcke was implicated in
misleading World Cup sponsor MasterCard during contract renewal talks. FIFA and
Blatter eventually signed with Visa, provoking a legal suit from MasterCard
which was settled for US$90 million.
Valcke's conduct and business
ethics were severely criticized by the federal judge in New York who heard the
case.
No comments:
Post a Comment